Weaves of Ashes-Chapter 282 - 277: Dragon Check-In

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Chapter 282: Chapter 277: Dragon Check-In

Location: Lower Realm — Western frontier territories

Date/Time: Mid Sparkfall, 9939 AZI

Realm: Lower Realm

The dawn ritual had become a kind of prayer.

Xingteng stood at the edge of a ridge that overlooked nothing — scrubland and dry grass and the bones of hills too old to remember their own names. Eyes closed. Hands open at her sides. Reaching with senses that had been carved open by trauma and refined by months of desperate, fruitless searching.

Where are you?

She pushed her awareness outward, past the thin essence of the Lower Realm’s frontier, past the whisper of wind through stunted trees, past the faint signatures of creatures that had never seen a dragon and never would. Searching for silver. For the warmth she’d felt in that abandoned cave sanctuary — laughter remembered in stone, safety woven into walls by hands she’d never held.

Nothing answered. The world remained stubbornly, impossibly empty.

Behind her, Yinglong was breaking camp. The sounds were practised, efficient — bedrolls compressed, wards dismantled, fire pit scattered so thoroughly that no one passing would know two travelers had spent the night. They’d been doing this for months. The routine had calcified into something beyond habit, closer to ritual. Wake. Search. Walk. Camp. Repeat.

Xingteng opened her haunted, dark grey eyes. Swallowed the disappointment that had long since stopped tasting like anything at all.

"Empty," she said.

Yinglong didn’t answer. She’d stopped asking anything? around the third month, when the question began to feel less like hope and more like cruelty. Instead, she handed Xingteng a strip of dried meat and a waterskin, and they stood together in the grey pre-dawn, chewing food that tasted like dust, staring at a landscape that had given them nothing.

The western frontier was supposed to be their best chance. Xinglong had said it — you have the strongest silver resonance, the frontier has fewer distractions, cleaner signatures. And it was true. Out here, beyond the settlements, beyond the trade roads, the essence was thin enough that a silver dragon’s presence should have blazed like a bonfire in darkness.

Should have.

Months. They’d been searching for months since splitting from the others at the Dark Forest cave. Had covered territory that would have taken mortal cultivators years to traverse — every valley, every ridge, every abandoned mine and hermit’s shelter and forgotten ruin that the unmapped west contained. Xingteng had reached out every dawn, pushed her silver resonance to its limits, strained until her temples ached and her vision blurred.

Nothing. Always nothing. The same perfect, maddening absence that had haunted them since the beginning.

"We’ve run out of west," Yinglong said.

Xingteng looked at her sister. Yinglong’s human form showed the wear — dark hair with its blue-black sheen had dulled from months of road dust and rationed washing, and the orange-amber eyes she’d suppressed to muddy brown carried a fatigue that went deeper than sleep could fix. But her spine was straight. Her jaw was set. The Guardian didn’t break. That was the point of her.

"I know," Xingteng said.

"The frontier ends in two days’ walk. After that, it’s the Ashveil Wastes — no settlements, no water, no essence worth sensing. Even if they went that far, there’d be nothing to hide behind."

"They didn’t go west." The admission cost Xingteng something, though she couldn’t name what. Months of walking. Months of reaching. All of it built on a direction that had never been right. "Heiteng was right from the beginning. They’re sheltered behind something ancient — some artifact or dimensional fold we can’t penetrate. Something that works on principles older than dragon civilisation."

She remembered his words through the Ley Mirror, months ago, mercury eyes distant with something like awe: her fate is woven into the fabric of reality itself. A thread so strong that even an ancient black dragon king had never sensed its like. A thread that ran into a wall so perfect his senses simply slid off.

If the queens were sheltered behind Luminari technology — or something older still — then searching the physical world was like trying to catch smoke with her fingers.

But Xingteng couldn’t stop trying. That was the problem. That was the gift and the curse of being the Quintet Heart — she felt things too deeply to abandon them, even when logic said they were lost.

***

They walked east.

Not a decision, exactly. More an absence of alternatives. The western frontier had given them nothing; the only direction left was back. Back toward the populated territories they’d already searched, back toward the trade roads and cities and settlements where their brothers were still combing through crowds and questioning merchants and finding precisely as much as the sisters had found in the wilderness.

Nothing.

The terrain shifted as they descended from the high frontier. Scrubland gave way to thin forest, thin forest to scattered farmland. The essence thickened marginally — still pathetically sparse by dragon standards, but enough that Xingteng’s senses stopped aching from the strain of reaching through near-vacuum.

They walked in the silence they’d learned to share. Not the heavy silence of things unsaid, but the lighter kind — two people who’d spent so many months in each other’s company that words had become optional. Yinglong filled the quiet when it threatened to turn inward, when Xingteng’s grey eyes went distant in a way that meant she was remembering things she shouldn’t. And Xingteng let her, grateful in ways she’d never be able to articulate.

But today, the silence was productive. Xingteng’s mind was working — turning over the same problem it had been grinding against since the cave, approaching it from a new angle carved by months of failure.

"The concealment isn’t dragon-made," she said.

Yinglong glanced at her. Waited.

"I’ve been thinking about it since the cave. Every concealment I know — shadow, silver, black, the old forms from before the Sundering — leaves a signature. Essence bent around a space creates distortion. The stronger the concealment, the more distortion. Even an ancient artifact should create a void that a sensitive could detect — the absence itself would be the tell."

"And this doesn’t?"

"No absence. No distortion. No wall. When I reach out and search for silver, I don’t hit resistance — I find nothing. As if the space where they are doesn’t exist at all. The essence flows through it like there’s nothing to flow around."

Yinglong’s dulled eyes sharpened. "That’s worse than hiding."

"It’s beyond hiding." Xingteng’s grey eyes held a clarity that surfaced when the analytical part of her mind — the part Heihuo hadn’t touched, couldn’t touch — locked onto a problem worth solving. "Dragon concealment displaces essence. Even Luminari artefacts should leave an impression, a shadow. This... erases the displacement entirely. Whoever’s protecting them has access to something that works on principles none of us understand."

"Which means searching for traces is pointless."

"We could cover the entire Lower Realm ten times and find nothing, because there’s nothing to find. The traces have been unmade."

The implication hung between them. Months of searching. Months of grinding effort and deferred hope and dawns spent reaching into emptiness. All of it confirmed as futile — not by failure, but by design.

"Then what do we do?" Yinglong asked. No despair in the question. Pure pragmatism. The Guardian recalculating.

Xingteng remembered something her sister had said, months ago, on a cliff overlooking the frontier valley: fate that strong doesn’t stay dormant. It creates ripples that reshape everything around it. Whatever she’s destined for, it’s big enough that even the gods would take notice.

"We stop looking for the queens," Xingteng said. "We start looking for the ripples."

***

The Ley Mirror pulsed at dusk.

Yinglong set it on flat stone at the edge of their camp — a sheltered hollow where two dry streambeds met, warded lightly, nothing that would draw attention. The connection took longer than it should have. Cross-realm interference was worse near the frontier’s edge, and the Lower Realm’s thin essence made everything harder.

Hulong’s face resolved through static. Their third brother. The Quintet Mind. He looked worse than the last check-in — leaner, eyes harder, the analytical precision sharpened to something closer to obsession.

"War update first," he said. No greeting. They’d all stopped bothering months ago. "The realm is fracturing faster than anyone predicted. Grand Assembly fallout — the truth about the false queens, the murdered hatchlings, the corruption — it’s ripping alliances apart. Twenty-three minor sects have declared for Shadow since Grandfather’s revelation. They want nothing to do with Bronze, Red, or Green. Not after learning what they covered up."

"And the three?" Yinglong asked.

"At each other’s throats. Bronze, Red, and Green were never truly allied — they tolerated each other while they shared a common interest in keeping the silver queens controlled. Now that interest is gone, and they’re fighting over who gets blamed for ten thousand years of atrocity." Hulong’s analytical orange eyes held a cold satisfaction. "There was a major engagement between Red and Bronze three weeks ago. Eighteen reds ambushed nine bronze enforcers near the Crimson Peaks. Heavy casualties on both sides. Green’s pulled into their own territories entirely — fortifying borders, refusing all diplomatic contact. They’re training. Preparing for something."

"So they’re too busy killing each other to search effectively," Xingteng said.

"In the Lower Realm, yes. But they’re still hunting. Red has scouts across the Upper Realm. Green is running intelligence operations in the Mid Realm. And Bronze—" Hulong paused. The pause itself carried weight. "Bronze has been spotted near the Riftmaw."

Silence.

The Riftmaw. The boundary between realms that even dragons treated with caution — the place where dimensional barriers were thinnest, where things leaked through that shouldn’t, where the Radiant Realm’s influence pressed closest to the mortal world.

"What would Bronze want at the Riftmaw?" Yinglong asked.

"That’s what concerns me." Hulong’s voice dropped. "Shanshe doesn’t have Realm Seals — the dwarves made sure of that three thousand years ago. He can’t access the Lower Realm through conventional means. But the Riftmaw isn’t conventional. It’s where barriers are thinnest, where things cross that shouldn’t. And there are... other powers near the Riftmaw that might be willing to make deals."

The implication settled like frost.

"Sharlin," Xingteng said.

"I have no proof. Only pattern recognition. Bronze scouts near the Riftmaw, where the Radiant Realm’s influence is strongest. Shanshe needs Lower Realm access. Sharlin needs dragon allies. The logic writes itself." Hulong’s jaw tightened. "If Bronze makes a deal with the Temple—"

"Then the queens have a new kind of hunter," Yinglong finished. "One with resources on both sides of the barrier."

The fire crackled. Somewhere in the gathering dark, a nightbird called — thin and reedy, the sound of a realm that had never known dragons.

"Grandfather is holding our gains," Hulong continued. "The smaller sects are rallying to Shadow — they’ve seen the evidence, the murdered hatchlings, the false queens. They want justice, and Grandfather is offering it. But they’re refugees, not soldiers — they need time to integrate, to train, to trust us. If Bronze secures outside help before we consolidate..." He didn’t finish.

"How long?" Xingteng asked.

"Maybe a year before the political landscape settles enough to matter. Right now, everyone’s reacting, not planning. That works in our favour — chaos keeps Bronze off-balance. But Shanshe is ancient and patient. He’s survived worse than civil war. He’ll find his footing eventually, and when he does, he’ll come for the queen with everything he has."

"Then we find her first."

"Agreed." Hulong’s eyes softened fractionally. "Any progress on your end?"

Xingteng shook her head. "The western frontier is exhausted. We’re heading east — we’ve run out of territory to search."

The mirror dimmed. The connection dissolved into static, then silence.

*** 𝕗𝗿𝕖𝐞𝐰𝗲𝕓𝐧𝕠𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝐨𝚖

Xingteng couldn’t sleep.

She lay in her bedroll, staring at stars she’d memorised over months of sleepless frontier nights, and felt something she hadn’t felt in a long time.

The quintet bond.

It was always there — the thread that connected five siblings across whatever distance separated them, the bloodline gift that was supposed to lead them to silver queens. For months, it had been the faintest directional tug, so subtle she sometimes wondered if she was imagining it. Southeast. Always southeast. Persistent but maddeningly vague — southeast covered half a continent.

But tonight, lying in a hollow between dry streambeds with her sister breathing softly beside her, Xingteng felt the bond shift.

Not dramatically. Not the blazing resonance of the original pulse that had shattered dragon politics and sent five siblings scattering across the realms. But the tug was — stronger. Clearer. Like a sound that had been hovering at the edge of hearing, suddenly resolving into something almost recognisable. Still distant. Still impossible to trace to a source. But unmistakably, undeniably more present than it had been yesterday, or last week, or last month.

She sat up. Yinglong was awake instantly — the Guardian’s sleep was never deeper than the nearest threat.

"What?" Barely a whisper.

"The bond," Xingteng said. "Do you feel it?"

Yinglong went still. Closed her eyes. Reached for the thread that connected them to their purpose.

Her eyes opened. Orange-amber, bright despite the darkness, the disguise forgotten in surprise.

"Stronger," she said.

"It’s not just the direction anymore. There’s — warmth in it. Like the sanctuary. Like the cave walls where she’d been happy." Xingteng pressed her hand to her chest, where the bond hummed with a resonance she’d been starving for. "She’s doing something. Growing. Using her power. Whatever she’s been sheltered behind — she’s becoming more present. More real."

"The ripples," Yinglong breathed. "You said to look for ripples."

"And this is one." Xingteng’s voice cracked with something that wasn’t grief and wasn’t hope but lived in the trembling space between them. "Southeast. Stronger than it’s been since the pulse. She’s alive, Yinglong. And she’s getting stronger."

They stared at each other across the dying embers of a fire that had burned to nothing.

Yinglong reached across the dark and took her sister’s hand. Squeezed once. Hard.

"Then we follow it," she said. "Stop searching blind. Follow the bond."

They broke camp in the dark. No discussion, no debate. Bedrolls compressed, wards dismantled, fire pit scattered with the efficiency of months of practice. By the time the first grey light touched the eastern horizon, they were already walking — two shadow dragon princesses in human disguise, heading east through a realm that didn’t know what moved through its territories.

Toward the bond. Toward the warmth. Toward whoever was burning bright enough to make the quintet thread sing after months of silence.

Months of searching in the wrong direction. Months of empty dawns and hope deferred until it calcified into something harder and more durable than hope had any right to be.

But the bond was pulling. Faint and steady and real — not imagined, not wished into existence, but there. A thread connecting them to the queen they’d sworn to find.

Xingteng’s hands had stopped shaking. Her grey eyes were fixed on the eastern horizon, where light was gathering behind mountains she couldn’t yet see.

That was enough. For now, that was enough.